Weststander
Well-known member
I got into Joy Division in 81, I was 13.
They changed my taste in music
Closer is a perfect album to me. Not a single duff song on the album.
Unknown Pleasures is fantastic, but i can do without, I rememember nothing.
I hadn't listened to Closer for a long time I bought it on CD in the 90s, because I knew I needed it in my collection, but never put it on.
About 10 years ago i was playing some songs on Spotify and for some reason Closer came up as a suggestion of other stuff to play.
I put it on expecting it to sound horribly dated 80s synth goth/indie rock.
It blew me away again, probably more so than when I was a teenager.
Listening to it again recently having just rewatched the film Control,made the lyrics even more poignant.
I read somewhere that Curtis told Sumner that writing the lyrics was the easiest thing he had ever done. "as if the songs were writing themselves"
It is an exceptional piece of work.
A similar story to yours, but I’m a couple of years older. Thankfully my mates also loved the same genre and artists, on a musical journey over much of our lives. Too young to see JD, but we saw New Order a few times in the mid 80’s.
Song writing (lyrics and the music) - all these bands in their autobio’s talk about the struggles, having to be in the right mood .... The Cure, The Smiths, JD and New Order. But without formal music training or rich parents funding a childhood on piano or guitar lessons, each reeled off countless innovative pieces of pop genius. Incredibly, mainly done in their late teens and early twenties, despite a lack of self belief, lyrics often scribbled down and music created in bedrooms at their parents homes.
I’d put The Stranglers and The Jam in that genius bracket too.